Macharia Kamau
Trucks of the first crude oil consignment from Lokichar,Turkana, arrive at the Mombasa's Changamwe KPRL storage facility in Mombasa County on Thursday,07th June,2018 afternoon. [Maarufu Mohamed,Standard]
NAIROBI, KENYA: Kenya may not be an oil exporter by
2022 as Tullow cites delays by the Government to make key decisions to
enable the project to move forward.
The firm had expected that
its joint investment partners and the
Government would be able to make the Final Investment Decision (FID) by
the end this year but this is likely to spill to 2020.
Tullow Oil has also pushed forward the date for the export of the first
cargo of oil produced under the pilot scheme to September, from the
earlier planned date of June 2019.
In a statement yesterday, the British oil explorer yesterday said
reaching an FID for the Kenyan project by end of 2019 was an ambitious
target. The company has in the past said it expected all the partners as
well as Government to commit resources for the commercial production
phase – what is termed as the Final Investment Decision (FID) – by end
of this year but this might now come next year.
SEE ALSO :Nanok vows to take State to court for gazetting three oil fields
The
decision, whereby the joint venture partners commit money as well as
other resources to a project is critical for the commencement of work
such as the development of fields as well as the construction of the
pipeline between Turkana and Lamu. While Tullow said it is still
optimistic about having an FID for the Lokichar project in the course of
2019, it noted that the Government needed to fast track some of the
processes.
Delay in getting the FID could delay oil production, which is currently expected to start in 2022.
“Tullow continues to target a Final Investment Decision (FID) in Kenya
by year-end although this remains an ambitious target… Discussions with
the Government regarding key commercial agreements are making steady
progress. A late 2019 FID remains contingent on these key Government of
Kenya deliverables,” said Tullow in a statement yesterday.
The firm has also pushed forward the date by which it expects to export
Kenya’s first cargo of crude produced under the Early Oil Pilot Scheme
(EOPS). The company had been eyeing to export the first cargo of crude
produced under the pilot in June this year but in the statement
yesterday said this could only happen in the third quarter of this year.
A cargo of about 400 000 barrels is expected to be shipped out in the
first cargo.
“EOPS continues to truck 600 barrels of oil per day to Mombasa where
80,000 barrels of oil are being stored ahead of export. Following
receipt of Regulatory Authority approval, which is expected shortly,
production will be increased to 2,000 barrels of oil per day, with the
first export cargo expected in the third quarter of 2019,” said the
company.
SEE ALSO :Government blocked from acquiring land in Turkana
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